Pictured here is the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, ahead of the 76th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China on September 30, 2025.
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BEIJING — China’s top leaders on Thursday stressed their resolve to boost domestic consumption over the next five years, on top of widely expected plans to bolster homegrown tech.
That’s according to a state media readout of the closely watched “Fourth Plenum” meeting for setting five-year development targets. China on Thursday also confirmed that Vice Premier He Lifeng, who participated in the plenary meeting, will visit Malaysia from Friday to Monday for U.S. trade talks — as anticipation grows over a possible meeting between the U.S. and Chinese presidents at the end of the month.
Despite broad calls to bolster China’s international influence and “safeguard the multilateral trading system,” the readout did not mention major countries by name as the meeting focuses largely on domestic development.
China must “vigorously boost consumption,” the meeting readout said, according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese. The leaders elaborated on the need for consumption with calls to balance it with “effective investment” and “adhere to the strategic point of expanding domestic demand.”
“New demand will lead to new supply, and new supply will create new demand,” the report said. The leaders also called for effective implementation of policies to support businesses and “special actions” to boost consumption.
The tone indicates that China’s policymakers are taking a closer look at the relationship between economic supply and demand than they have in past years, said Zong Liang, former chief researcher at the Bank of China.
That change — which doesn’t come lightly in China’s ideologically driven government — still isn’t a green light for cash handouts. Even with muted retail sales since the pandemic, Beijing has steered away from directly giving consumers money, in contrast with U.S. stimulus checks in the wake of Covid-19.

The readout “signals a continued emphasis on investment — this time as a means to stimulate consumption — rather than a bold, direct push to expand consumption itself,” Yue Su, Beijing-based principal economist for China at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said in a note.
“We can therefore expect investment to focus more on consumption-related sectors and activities, such as improved urban planning, public services, and elderly care,” she said. Su pointed out that over the past decade China has heavily relied on investment for growth, leading to concerns about overinvestment.
In the last two years, China has sought to boost consumption with subsidies targeted at home appliances and certain other consumer goods. The country has also encouraged local governments to hold sporting events and other entertainment to boost spending.
Since the readout didn’t call for “vigorously boosting income,” Eurasia Group’s China Director Dan Wang is…
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